He Found His Pregnant Wife at the Sink. Then the Medication Was Gone-congtien

At 10:04 p.m., Ethan Carter came home to his large suburban house in Frisco, Texas, with fourteen hours of work still sitting in his shoulders.

He had spent the day inside a software consulting firm in downtown Dallas, solving other people’s emergencies while his own life quietly came apart behind his front door.

Traffic on the Dallas North Tollway had been brutal, the kind that turns a thirty-minute drive into a slow punishment of brake lights, heat, and silence.

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By the time he pulled into the driveway, all he wanted was to kiss his wife, check on the baby, take a shower, and sleep beside her for a few hours before doing it all again.

That was the story he told himself every day.

He worked too much because he loved them.

He missed dinners because he was providing.

He swallowed exhaustion because comfort had a cost, and he believed he was paying it for the right people.

Inside the house, the first thing he heard was laughter.

It rolled out of the living room bright and careless, mixing with the blast of the television and the rattle of ice in a plastic smoothie cup.

The air smelled like expensive perfume, takeout grease, and the faint chemical sharpness of dish soap.

Ethan loosened his tie with one hand and looked toward the living room.

His mother, Diane Carter, was stretched across the recliner with a blanket over her legs as if the house were a hotel and the evening had been arranged for her comfort.

Vanessa Carter sat on the couch scrolling through designer handbags on the brand-new iPhone Ethan had bought her for graduation.

Courtney Carter was laughing at videos on her tablet, one socked foot tucked under her, completely at ease.

Madison Carter was complaining because her food delivery had forgotten extra sauce, as though that were the greatest injustice in the room.

Burger wrappers, milkshake cups, fries, napkins, and half-open sauce packets crowded the coffee table.

Ethan recognized the delivery bag from a place that charged almost twenty dollars for a burger before fees.

He paid the mortgage.

He paid the electricity.

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